Dimensions | 16 × 23 × 4 cm |
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In the original dustsheet. Black cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.
F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feel and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.
Unfortunate battle precipitated by General Townshend and his insistence to continue fighting costing the lives of tens of thousands of British and Indian troops and a death march around Baghdad, while he lived out the rest of the war in relative comfort and luxury as a captive by the Ottoman Turks near Constantinople. B&W photographs with maps.
The siege of Kut Al Amara (7 December 1915 – 29 April 1916), also known as the first battle of Kut, was the besieging of an 8,000 strong British Army garrison in the town of Kut, 160 kilometres (100 mi) south of Baghdad, by the Ottoman Army. In 1915, its population was around 6,500. Following the surrender of the garrison on 29 April 1916, the survivors of the siege were marched to imprisonment at Aleppo, during which many died. Historian Christopher Catherwood has called the siege “the worst defeat of the Allies in World War I”. Ten months later, the British Indian Army, consisting almost entirely of newly recruited troops from Western India, conquered Kut, Baghdad and other regions in between in the Fall of Baghdad.
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